Beware of This Pattern Before “Buying Low” on USDJPY

Talking Points:

  • Value of Candlestick Reading

  • USDJPY Bearish Pattern

  • Key Focal Levels on USDJPY

“Step after step the latter is ascended”

-Japanese Proverb

For real-time market sentiment based on price alone, many experienced traders turn to Japanese candlesticks. Candlesticks are easy to understand and can alert you to shifts in market sentiment in real-time. This real-time analysis has many benefits over lagging indicators like moving averages or oscillators.

Value of Candlestick Reading

In fact, a recent article I wrote about stocks being heavy was based on a weekly candlestick pattern. That candlestick pattern was a toping formation known as a shooting star which means that bullish sentiment couldn’t hold higher prices. Since the top of that pattern, SPX500 had dropped 75 points and could be on its way to retesting the 2014 lows of 1737 or more. The low developed off a candlestick pattern known as a hammer bottom shown below.

Learn Forex: Candlesticks Can Provide Invaluable Real-Time Analysis

Bearish-Candlestick-Pattern-USDJPY_body_Picture_1.png, Beware of This Pattern Before “Buying Low” on USDJPY
Bearish-Candlestick-Pattern-USDJPY_body_Picture_1.png, Beware of This Pattern Before “Buying Low” on USDJPY

Courtesy of Marketscope 2.0

The chart above is on the weekly chart. However, the candlestick approach works on all time frames. Short-term traders will often look for similar patterns on hourly charts that position or swing traders will look for on daily or weekly charts. Within the Shooting Star on the weekly SPX500 chart, you can see bearish engulfing candles on the Daily SPX500 chart.

Learn Forex: Bearish Engulfing Means That Buyers Were Absent in the SPX500 Drop

Bearish-Candlestick-Pattern-USDJPY_body_Picture_2.png, Beware of This Pattern Before “Buying Low” on USDJPY
Bearish-Candlestick-Pattern-USDJPY_body_Picture_2.png, Beware of This Pattern Before “Buying Low” on USDJPY

Courtesy of Marketscope 2.0

USDJPY Bearish Pattern

You may be asking what these examples have to do with a warning on buying low in USDJPY. Simply put, there are a handful of warning signals in other markets that are significantly well to the USDJPY. However, one thing makes the USDJPY pattern unique and that is the number of candles involved.

Learn Forex: Bearish 3 Continuation Pattern on USDJPY

Bearish-Candlestick-Pattern-USDJPY_body_Picture_3.png, Beware of This Pattern Before “Buying Low” on USDJPY
Bearish-Candlestick-Pattern-USDJPY_body_Picture_3.png, Beware of This Pattern Before “Buying Low” on USDJPY

Courtesy of Marketscope 2.0

The significance of a candlestick pattern often relates to the number of candles involved. The Bearish Three Falling Method involves 5 distinct candles with a move back in the direction of the prevailing trend making it a high conviction trend continuation pattern. The key components of the Bearish Three Falling method is in the large bearish candle kicking off the move followed by three weak counter trend candles. Then a large bearish candle that closes near the lows resumes the prior pattern to a bearish move.

Key Levels on USDJPY

While the pattern is clear, there is still support that would ideally need to break before a trade is risked. The double-bottom low of 101.20 currently provides a lot of support and as you can see from the chart above, that is the low of the pattern and therefore needs to break before a trigger is given. Below 101.20, you should keep an eye on the 2014 low of 100.747 as buyers may jump in there to try and push up this multi-year trend before risking a move down to the upper 90’s.